We can all indisputably agree on that the three best things on 🌎 are warm blankets, emojis, and Slack. And when I discovered that I could add my own custom emojis into Slack, it was arguably one of the 🎉 😍 moments of my short-lived life (barely exceeding a close number two, when I discovered this warm blanket). So I built emojipacks, a command line interface, to bulk upload emojis into Slack. Let's take a 👀 at the code that accomplishes this ✨🌟✨🌟 feat.

👶 The Beginning

Shortly after I discovered the ability to add custom emojis in Slack, I was hooked like a 🐟 . I 🍩 even remember taking a break until the first 💯 emojis were added. But 🚢 emoji after emoji inevitably ate away at my entire day at work. Though I managed to enter a rhythm of 🔦 for emojis and then uploading them all at once, it still took a long ⌚️. I had to 🚧 off ⌛ ️on my 📅 just so I was able to have uninterrupted time dedicated to uploading emojis. Not the most glamorous of jobs, but somebody had to do it 🙌 💪 .

Knowing that Slack is active on Twitter (they even have a @SlackLovesTweets account that just RT's awesome tweets), I decided to 🚀 this tweet: